Welcome

My Blog's aim is to promote and encourage others to participate in the wonderful hobby that is Moth-trapping.So why do we do it? well for some people it is to get an insight into the world of Moths, for others it is to build a list of species much like 'Twitching' in the Bird world.The reason I do it....you never know what you might find when you open up that trap! I hope to show what different species inhabit our Country by getting people awareof what is out there.On this Blog you will find up-to-date records and pictures.I run a trap regularly in my garden here in Hertfordshire and enjoy doing field trips to various localities within Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire.

Please also check out the links in the sidebar to the right for other people's Blogs and informative Websites.

Thanks for looking & happy Mothing!

KEY

NFY = New Species For The YearNFG = New Species For The GardenNEW! = New Species For My Records

Any Species highlighted inREDsignifies a totally new species for my records.

If you have any questions or enquiries then please feel free to email meContact Email :bensale@rocketmail.com

Tuesday, 1 January 2019

Happy New Year to all whom read my posts and I hope you enjoy reading about them this year as much as Ienjoy writing them up.2018 was an absolutely incredible year for moths, probably better than my debut year in 2006, no other year comes close for sheer numbers, diversity and out of habitat rarities.The numbers speak for themselves, here are my yearly total of species per annum.Total Garden List 2018 [529] 2017 - [467] 2016 - [372] 2015 - [401] 2014 - [423] 2013 - [385]An extra 62 species were recorded this year than the previous best year (Just last year).And amazingly, 66 new species were added to the garden list this year alone (24 Macros and 32 Micros). Taking my total garden species list to 689, not bad for a suburban garden. Here below are my favourite picks from the year, a year which will probably be hard to match!

1) Frosted Green - 16/04/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] - Not one but two and garden firsts! Frosted Green is associated with Oaks and luckily I have several along the bridleway that runs along the bottom of my garden.But why I haven't recorded it in the
previous 5 Springs of trapping here is a mystery? My theory is from what
other's have been posting, it's having a bumper year and I got lucky in
attracting not one but two to my trap.2) Blossom Underwing - 20/04/18 - Stevenage, North Herts[New For Garden and New For Me] -Easily the best moth so far this year was
found in the bottom of my trap, a stunning Blossom Underwing and quite
unexpected and not one that many people can say that is on their garden
list. We have 3 or 4 very mature Oak trees along
the bridleway at the bottom of our garden, i'm hoping it is a product
of those, but it could have equally wandered from somewhere else. 3) Pancalia
leuwenhoekella - 14/05/18 - Hexton Chalk Pit [New For Me] - The highlight of my mothing year so far and such a
stunning little micro! Found on a walk through Chalk Grassland, not many
records for Herts of this supposedly scarce micro, until I continued to scour the area on various warm days and turned about 15 different individuals up. Clearly under-recorded.

4) Dingy Shell - 25/05/18 - Stevenage, North Herts - [New For Garden] -Great to add this moth that resembles a Butterfly, it seems to be fairly common amongst Woodand in the County, but is a little bit more secretive around hardens it appears.5) Marsh Pug - 21/05/18 - Hexton Chalk Pit [New For Me] -Another sunshine walk around Hexton Chalk Pit revealed plenty of moths on the wing, I never quite expected to net Pugs... I started netting Grey Pugs, 5 in total and then I netted something different. Much smaller and intricately marked. My first ever Marsh Pug and a Herts rarity.

6) Common Heath - 21/05/18 - Hexton Chalk Pit [New For Me] -On the same day as the Marsh Pug who would have thought I would find another good Macro. I saw a flappy looking dark moth struggling in the breeze and a sprint and a good solid sweep later netted a mint Common Heath, what a blooming cracker it was. I've previously only seen this species in France.7) Cydia ulicetana - 04/06/18 - Hertford Heath - [New For Me] -Another brief walk out and across Hertford
Heath yielded my first ever Cydia ulicetana. Hardly
surprising given the amount of Gorse and Broom in the vicinity. One i'd
been too lazy to find in previous years!

8) Ancylis diminutana - 25/05/18 - Home Wood, Bedfordshire [New For Me and Bedfordshire] -An incredible session for the first trip to Home Wood in Bedfordshire. We had never trapped with gusto this early on before, to say it paid off would be an understatement! This moth was a really good one for me, an unusual looking moth.

9) Cydia illutana - 25/05/18- Home Wood, Bedfordshire [New For Me and Bedfordshire] -Another new to Beds species, 2 were trapped in seperate traps along the rides along the edge of the woodland, botn were retained and only recently confirmed by Andy Banthorpe.10) Elachista triatomea - 04/06/18 - Grassland bordering Ermine Street, Central Herts [New For Me]- A couple of hours wander around some verge
grassland with mixed trees and shrubs and a plethora of wildflowers
including Ox-eye Daisies yielded some great moths for me.
On both days it was very warm and humid,
and the sunnier day on the 4th yielded better results but I found the
sunshine made the moths incredibly hard to pot up from the net, usually
going skywards instantly and beyond my control. I recorded 5 new species of moth for my records Commophila aeneana, Dichrorampha sequana, Elachista triatomea, Endothenia oblongana, Grapholita tenebrosana. Elachista triatomea was certainly the pick of the bunch, a County rarity.11) Dewick's Plusia - 01/06/18 - Stevenage, North Herts[New For Garden] - This moth has a sad tale...I was photographing the
moths from the previous night when a wing caught my attention, it was
not only any other moth wing, it was distinctive and I instantly
recognised it as a Dewick's Plusia forewing, albeit missing the other 3
wings, body, head and antennae...drat.Mixed emotions ensued, bitter happiness kind of described my feeling at the time.It of course was a garden first and a good
record for the County of this migrant species and certainly the most
northerely recorded in the county of Herts.Over a month later I recorded another one, albeit in one piece this time and from a regular field trip haunt of mine, Ashwell Quarry.

12) Sloe Pug - 13/06/18 - Ashwell Quarry, North Herts [New For Me] - A warm day of 25 degrees and muggy, the sky inevitably cleared and it got cool quite quicjly, It turned out to be worth though with one new
moth for my records. There were at least 5 examplrs of Sloe Pug! Hardly
surprising given the fact that the reserve is bordered by umpteen Prunus
bushes, but the fact that I had never seen them before at this time of
the year was a nice surprise in itself.

13) Gelechia scotinella - 27/06/18 - Home Wood, Bedfordshire [New For Me] -A rare moth just about anywhere, I was lucky to net it flying around the Actinic trap at dusk. A 3rd County record for Beds. This Woodland always surprises and holds a personal record for me. Over the last 7 trips there, every time I have trapped there I have recorded at least 2 new moth species for my records.

14) Four-spotted Footman - 01/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts[New For Garden] - On the night of the first of July, not one, not two, but 4 new species for the garden were observed, Four-spotted Footman, Larch Pug, Scarce Silver-lines and Green Arches. I would have been happy with any one of them, and too top it all off I got two Four-spotted Footman!! Another species I had only seen in France previously.

15) Pseudopostega crepusculella - 07/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts[New For Garden and New For Me] -This moth
was completely new for me. It's a tiny white moth that is believed to
favour mint as it's foodplant, some of which is grown in our garden. The moth was dissected just to be certain.

16) Platytes alpinella - 08/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts[New For Garden] - It was two a piece between the Macros and the Micros for the incredible 4 new for garden species in one night on the 08th of July.The most unexpected and pick being Platytes
alpinella, a predominantly coastal species which i've taken before on
the Essex coast, so it was a bit of a shock to get one in the garden
trap, also confirmed as only the 2nd County record.Southern Wainscot was also a presumed wanderer on such a warm and muggy night.Two other species that caught my eye and
that were instantly potted were the other 2 garden firsts, the stunning
Figure of Eighty and the pretty in pink Celypha rosaceana.17) Coleophora conspicuella - 13/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts[New For Me and Herts] -Graeme Smith dissected a rather distinct large Coleophora from my garden trap, it turned out to be a County first of Coleophora conspicuella.Subsequently, I took another similiar
looking Coleophora 3 nights later at Ashwell Quarry, which again turned
out to be Coleophora conspicuella.Even better was that they were both a male and a female!

18) Sorhagenia rhamniella - 16/07/18 - Ashwell Quarry, North Herts - [New For Me] -a first moth of this genus for me, quite an unusual Gelechiidae which resembles Blastobasidae. It was to be the 5th County record for Herts and was dissected once again by Graeme Smith Ashwell comes up trumps again! 19) Aristotelia
ericinella - 23/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden and New For Me] -A garden first, the Heather feeder Aristotelia
ericinella. Totally unexpected but being caught at a similiar time to
20+ trapped at Nomansland Common by Graeme Smith, in fact a week later it
turned up at Ashwell! nodding to suggestions that with the warm humid
air it was dispersing, much like what we experience with wetland
wanderer's.In must have had a good year and a new species for me to boot!20) Yarrow Pug - 24/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden and New For Me] -July was just fantastic in my garden. Most nights that I was running my trap I was recording new for garden species. On the 24th this was no different with a brand new Pug species for me, the rather large Yarrow Pug.21) Gold Spot - 26/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] - Not a great deal of species back on the 26th of July, but a new moth for my garden was indeed the icing on the cake!The moth was the beautiful, Gold Spot. A moth I had only seen once before on a
field trip to Rye Meads NR, a wetland habitat that seems to suit this
moth well in the County.I never got a photo of it as someone else
took it for a photo, so it was great to get the opportunity to see the
species up close.

22)Chrysoclista linneella - 27/07/18 - Ashwell Quarry, North Herts - [New For Me] - Just when Ashwell couldn't get any better, it did! With 4! New Micro moths for my records, they were. Ancylosis oblitella (presumed migrant/wanderer and rare for the County) Chrysoclista linneella, (5th County record and trapped on the edge of the
arable field) at least 4 Rhopobota stagnana and Bactra furfurana (2nd County record). I picked Chrysoclista linneella out for it's prettyness.23) Bulrush Wainscot - 03/08/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] - A lovely mild spell at the beginning of August really helped boost numbers, and on the 3rd of August this was no exception. I was lucky to add Bulrush Wainscot to the garden list, a predominantly wetland species but on quite a few people's garden lists, it was finally my time for it! 24) Agriphila selasella - 03/08/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] -On the same night as the Bulrush Wainscot was a grden first grass moth, Agriphila selasella is a pretty good garden record in the County, more frequently encountered out on chalk grassland.

25) Ocnerostoma piniariella/friesei - 28/07/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden and New For Me] -Still awaiting dissection, a first for me and my records, quite a small white moth but nevertheless very different to anything else.

26) Caloptilia falconipennella - 03/08/18 - Radwell Meadows, North Herts [New For Me] -A new species of Caloptilia, a genus that are quite quirky in their own way, sitting an acute angle in a bottom down posture. This was one of two seen this year, both in Herts.27) Pyrausta despicata - 18/08/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] - A Pyralid I rarely see, most of my records over the years are from Coastal locations, i've had a few inland on rough ground but it was extra special to get one in the garden trap.28) Scrobipalpa obsoletella - 02/09/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden and New For Me] - - Dissected
by Graeme Smith and initial thoughts were that it was Tuta absoluta, an
extremely scarce moth in these parts... it turned out not to be this
species, but an equally amazing record and a 2nd record for the County! A
saltmarsh species turning up 60 miles from the nearest coastline!29) Duponchelia fovealis - 03/09/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden and New For Me] - A day
later and after the great Scrobipalpa record from the previous night, I
really didn't expect another new moth for me and my garden again. This
is an adventive species which seems to have colonised certain parts of
the UK, originally from the Med and North Africa extending to the
Middle-East and even the USA.

30) Clancy's Rustic - 11/09/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden and New For Me][New to Herts and New For Me] - A lovely surprise was waiting for me on the morning of the 12th of
September, a new moth for me and new to the County of Hertfordshire to
boot! There had been quite a few reports of them turning up along the
south coast and it was great to 'get lucky' and easily my best Macro
moth of the year. Another was caught (and duly dissected by Graeme
Smith) by Ian Bennell a few days after. 31) Aproaerema anthyllidella - 12/09/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] - A new moth for my garden, a welcome Gelechiidae which I encounter
fairly frequently out on field trips, in woodland and grassy verges
typically. 32) Large Wainscot - 04/10/18 - Stevenage, North Herts [New For Garden] [New For Garden and New For Me] - A
garden first of this predominantly wetland moth, well chuffed and after
last months Bulrush Wainscot and a Southern Wainscot in July, i've
caught up on a few of this group now which is very pleasing indeed.